Speechwriter apologizes for Melania Trump’s ‘plagiarized’ address

A speechwriter for Donald Trump’s company said Wednesday she made a mistake by taking passages from a 2008 speech by Michelle Obama for the Republican Party convention speech delivered by Melania Trump this week.

In a statement issued by the campaign, Meredith McIver took the blame, but made it clear that Mrs. Trump knew the passages were from the first lady’s speech.

“A person she has always liked is Michelle Obama,” McIver says of Mrs. Trump. “Over the phone, she read me some passages from Mrs. Obama’s speech as examples. I wrote them down and later included some of the phrasing in the draft that ultimately became the final speech.”

Questions about plagiarism hung over the opening days of the GOP convention, overshadowing Mrs. Trump’s performance, which had enthralled the convention delegates. The statement came after the campaign spent two days insisting that it wasn’t plagiarism and calling the criticism absurd.

The pushback from the Trump campaign was hard. At one point, campaign co-chairman Paul Manafort blamed Democratic Party leader Hillary Clinton for the controversy, though he offered no coherent theory on how she could have orchestrated it.

McIver, co-author of some of Donald Trump’s books, said she offered to resign, but the Republican nominee for president refused to accept her resignation.

Read  Special counsel moves to drop all charges in election interference case against Trump

The controversy erupted on social media Monday night after her speech as sharp-eyed viewers expressed outrage over the similarities. It continued Tuesday as the Trump campaign’s explanation failed to mollify critics.

For Mrs. Trump, 46, a Slovenian-born former model who is Donald Trump’s third wife and 24 years his junior, the controversy marred a moment in the spotlight that had been months in the making.

The speech required her to overcome her wariness about public speaking, especially considering her heavily accented English, and to present herself to the public as her husband’s partner, a poised mother and wife passionate about issues impacting women and children.

“I did not check Mrs. Obama’s speeches. This was my mistake, and I feel terrible for the chaos I have caused Melania and the Trumps, as well as to Mrs. Obama,” McIver said. “No harm was meant.”

McIver was described in the statement as an “in-house staff writer at the Trump Organization.”

McIver started at the Trump Organization in 2001, according to her profile on the website of a booking agency called the All American Speakers Bureau.

Before that, she worked on Wall Street, according to the profile. She is originally from San Jose, California. The profile says she trained at George Balanchine’s School of American Ballet and graduated from the University of Utah with a degree in English.

Read  Deportations, lawsuits, increased scrutiny: How the Trump administration could handle campus antisemitism

“I asked to put out this statement because I did not like seeing the way this was distracting from Mr. Trump’s historic campaign for president and Melania’s beautiful message and presentation,” McIver said.

She apologized for “the confusion and hysteria my mistake has caused.”

By: AP

>